How Google is stealing our students’ brainpower

It’s frightening to think, but there’s strong and growing evidence that search engines and the technology of smart phones are rewiring how our brains process and retrieve information – to our hurt.

There a great article in The Atlantic magazine right now:  Is Google Making Students Stupid?, a review of Nicholas Carr’s new book, The Glass Cage: Automation and Us. Both article and book analyze the dangers of information technology and automation. 

My own experience as a teacher of 5th-12th grade homeschool students in effective communication and critical thinking classes support the article’s premise — a student’s ability to memorize information appears to be on the decline. Actually, it’s not just students, but anyone who makes a habit of using the internet and apps instead of cultivating their memories.

Here’s a short excerpt from Carr’s book “The effect of ubiquitous spell check and AutoCorrect software is a revealing example. Psychologists studying the formation of memories have found that the act of generating a word in your mind strengthens your capacity to remember it. When a computer automatically corrects a spelling mistake or offers a drop-down menu of options, we’re no longer forced to generate the correct spelling in our minds.”

Take a look at the article. Do your own research. How we raise our kids to think has never been a more important topic.

A closing excerpt from the article: “Carr notes that the word “robot” derives from robota, a Czech term for servitude. His book is a valuable reminder that if we don’t carefully examine the process that makes us dependent on technology, our position in the master-servant relationship can become the opposite of what we imagine.”

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